Vasily Ivanovich Surikov (Russian: Василий Иванович Суриков; 24 January 1848, Krasnoyarsk - 19 March 1916, Moscow) was a Russian Realisthistory painter. Many of his works have become familiar to the general public through their use as illustrations.

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He was born to an old Don Cossack family that had settled in Siberia.[1] His father was a Collegiate Registrar, a civil service rank that often served as postmasters. In 1854, as a result of his father being reassigned, the family moved to the village of Sukhobuzimskoye, where he began his primary education.

In 1859, his father died of tuberculosis so the family returned to Krasnoyarsk and were forced to rent the second floor of their house to make ends meet. He began drawing while attending the district school and was encouraged by the local art teacher. His first formal work dates from 1862, but his family could not afford to continue his education and he became a clerk in a government office. This brought him into contact with Pavel Zamyatin, the Governor of Yenisei, who was able to find him a patron; Pyotr Kuznetsov, a local merchant who owned several small gold mines.[2]

In 1877, he received a commission to paint murals at the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour (then still under construction) and he moved to Moscow.[2] Unable to afford a house, he lived in rented apartments and hotels and visited Krasnoyarsk whenever possible. In 1878, he married Elisabeth Charais, a French woman who was descended from the Decembrist, Pyotr Svistunov, on her mother's side.[1] They had two daughters.

After that, he chose to remain in Moscow and began the series of historical paintings that would establish his reputation; starting with "The Morning of the Streltsy Execution". In 1881, he had his first exhibition with the Peredvizhniki.[1] In 1883, "Menshikov in Berezov" was bought by Pavel Tretyakov for a sum that allowed him to take a European tour. In 1887, he added portraits to his repertoire; beginning with one of his mother.[2]

In 1888, his wife died and he returned to Krasnoyarsk with his daughters, for two years, where he painted his most lighthearted picture, "The Capture of Snow Town". This was followed by a visit to his ancestral home in Siberia. There, on the Ob River, he made sketches for one of his most familiar works, "The Conquest of Siberia by Yermak Timofeyevich" (an event in which some of his ancestors had participated).[2] This brought him a full membership in the Imperial Academy.[1] In 1897, he visited Switzerland and painted "Suvorov Crossing the Alps", which was purchased by Tsar Nicholas II.

In 1907, he left the Peredvizhniki and joined the "Union of Russian Artists". Three years later, he visited Spain, together with his son-in-law, Pyotr Konchalovsky.[2] That same year, he and the architect, Leonid Chernishyov, opened an art school. Four years later, he made an extended stay in Krasnoyarsk, painting landscapes.

By this time, he was suffering from chronic coronary disease. A trip to Crimea for treatment in 1915 failed to ameliorate the problem and he died early the following year after returning to Moscow. He was buried at Vagankovo Cemetery, next to his wife.[1]

In 1948, on the 100th anniversary of his birth, his estate in Krasnoyarsk became a museum. Two monuments have been erected there; in 1954 and, more recently, in 2002 (by the sculptor Yuri Zlotya). A biographical movie of his life (Vasily Surikov) was made by Mosfilm in 1959; written by Emil Braginsky and directed by Anatoly Rybakov with Yevgeni Lazarev as Surikov and Larisa Kadochnikova as his wife, Elizaveta.[3] Numerous streets and squares throughout Russia have been named after him, as well as a crater on Mercury.